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183
Oct 24, 2012
10/12
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KGO
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>> big government. probably bridges on socialism. >> reporter: travis and monesha, city dweller, talk raid i don't remember for them is on the left side of the dial. >> npr. >> npr. >> reporter: the word conservative, what does that mean to you? >> i think it's being comfortable with the status quo and being nervous about how that could change. >> reporter: they might as well have been watching the debate -- >> it is stronger now than when i came into office. >> reporter: on two different planets. >> unbelievable. >> reporter: afterwards, at the bar, something interesting. >> you really think that the republicans would outlaw birth control? >> yes. >> reporter: genuine debate and discussion. >> i think it's derailed in the last four years -- >> i think it's a steady progression. >> reporter: not that it changed anybody's minds. show of hands, who feels obama won this? and show of hand, romney? >> i'm undecided. can i do undecided. didn't have a chance to really absorb it as much as i probably would if i
>> big government. probably bridges on socialism. >> reporter: travis and monesha, city dweller, talk raid i don't remember for them is on the left side of the dial. >> npr. >> npr. >> reporter: the word conservative, what does that mean to you? >> i think it's being comfortable with the status quo and being nervous about how that could change. >> reporter: they might as well have been watching the debate -- >> it is stronger now than when i came...
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190
Apr 8, 2012
04/12
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CSPAN
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eye 190
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we should worry about secret government. there's more secrecy, it's better organized, it is concealed better and -- it doesn't mean it's necessarily illegal, but the judge who said it got right -- democracies die in darkness. i do not have the kind of confidence that you would hope about are we penetrating, are we describing these institutions at all levels. >> the president said an interesting thing today. he basically challenge the people in the audience to go out and find out if what he was saying was true. i think he laid something out -- we know what he said today is going to be the basis of his campaign in terms of his domestic and economic message. i i think it's real question whether we will go out there and determine whether what he said is the truth. there was an awful lot he asserted today that this checkable. if your newspaper is in cleveland, you can go to the ohio senator who is a republican and say was obama telling the truth? >> said that could be my next book. >> the most important thing we do is determine w
we should worry about secret government. there's more secrecy, it's better organized, it is concealed better and -- it doesn't mean it's necessarily illegal, but the judge who said it got right -- democracies die in darkness. i do not have the kind of confidence that you would hope about are we penetrating, are we describing these institutions at all levels. >> the president said an interesting thing today. he basically challenge the people in the audience to go out and find out if what...
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Nov 7, 2012
11/12
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KQEH
tv
eye 76
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am personally tonight see money out of government. i'm a very big proponent of campaign finance reform of limiting of the role of lobbyist and limiting the role of corporate personhood because i feel right now who has the largest warchest is the determiner of who's going to be elected for a specific office or what kind of laws are going to be passed by oicongress. >> you have a better chance to be an organ donor than seeing any other retirement money. >> yeah i think this is a perfect,ind of forum, for us all to come and talk abou-- >> back and forth. >> yes. i'ab seen many souls changed in the last three days. >> really. >> yeah. on all sides including the other side of the --. >> i went through the woodstock generation and i thought it's back to business as usual. and sort of it was a big pa styy that's what i see this as, a party with no cover. i'm a defender of money. freedom, individual freedom, ch people. because i'm still,c even though i've not gray, i'm still trying to be one. because the more money i have the more good i can
am personally tonight see money out of government. i'm a very big proponent of campaign finance reform of limiting of the role of lobbyist and limiting the role of corporate personhood because i feel right now who has the largest warchest is the determiner of who's going to be elected for a specific office or what kind of laws are going to be passed by oicongress. >> you have a better chance to be an organ donor than seeing any other retirement money. >> yeah i think this is a...
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175
Nov 4, 2012
11/12
by
FOXNEWS
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eye 175
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in celebration of over 75 years of our government employees insurance company, or geico...as most of you know it. ...i propose savings for everyone! i'm talking hundreds here... and furthermore.. newcaster: breaking news. the gecko is demanding free pudding. and political parties that are actual parties! with cake! and presents! ah, that was good. too bad nobody could hear me. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. >> announcer: meet jill. she thought she'd feel better after seeing her doctor. and she might have, if not for kari, the identity thief who stole jill's social security number to open credit cards, destroying jill's credit and her dream of retirement. now meet amanda. with a swipe of her debit card, she bought some gas... and an all-expense-paid trip to hawaii for ben. ben is the intity thief who used a device called a skimmer to steal her formation from her card to open a fraudulent account. every year millions of americans just like you learn that a little personal information in the wrong hands could wre havoc on your life. this
in celebration of over 75 years of our government employees insurance company, or geico...as most of you know it. ...i propose savings for everyone! i'm talking hundreds here... and furthermore.. newcaster: breaking news. the gecko is demanding free pudding. and political parties that are actual parties! with cake! and presents! ah, that was good. too bad nobody could hear me. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. >> announcer: meet jill. she...
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Mar 26, 2012
03/12
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WJLA
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eye 179
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. >> the real issue that most americans are concerned about is the constitutionality of the government forcing americans to pay for a very expensive insurance policy. >> the obama administration is defending the provision and says the mandate is essential. fighting back against the 26 states against the lawsuit, the white house is promising the law will be upheld. >> by the end of this decade, we will be glad the republicans challenged obamacare. >> both sides are aware of the election-year effect this supreme court decision could have. >>no cameras are allowed inside the courtroom. audio recordings will be made available each day after 2:00. arguments are set to begin first thing tomorrow morning and her expected to go until wednesday. no decision is expected until later in the summer. >> to talk more about this ongoing health-care debate, abbie phillips joins us. this is an historic moment. this case is unprecedented in so many ways. >> this is an historic health care law. you will hear that a lot from the obama administration. many of the challenges are unprecedented. they're going
. >> the real issue that most americans are concerned about is the constitutionality of the government forcing americans to pay for a very expensive insurance policy. >> the obama administration is defending the provision and says the mandate is essential. fighting back against the 26 states against the lawsuit, the white house is promising the law will be upheld. >> by the end of this decade, we will be glad the republicans challenged obamacare. >> both sides are aware...
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136
Nov 15, 2012
11/12
by
FOXNEWS
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eye 136
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government for 2010 u.s. oil spill. the company will plead guilty to felony counts related to the death of 11 workers. as well as lying to congress. two b.p. employees will reportedly face manslaughter charges. thousands of united airlines passengers were stranded for several hours today when the company's computers went down. by early afternoon, united said the problem had been reed. it's at least the third computer outal for the airline since june. the connecticut governor's office says super storm sandy cost the state at least $360 million. the storm is being blamed for manufacturing downturns in philadelphia and new york. eric shawn has more on president obama's visit to disaster zone. >> comforter in chief, president obama toured staten island, parts which were devastated by hurricane sandy. >> my promise to everybody that i was speaking on behalf of the country when i said we will be here until the rebuilding is complete. i meant it. i will come back today and in future to make sure we followed through on that com
government for 2010 u.s. oil spill. the company will plead guilty to felony counts related to the death of 11 workers. as well as lying to congress. two b.p. employees will reportedly face manslaughter charges. thousands of united airlines passengers were stranded for several hours today when the company's computers went down. by early afternoon, united said the problem had been reed. it's at least the third computer outal for the airline since june. the connecticut governor's office says super...
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214
Apr 5, 2012
04/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 214
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i think in the same way that watergate changed journalism it changed government officials, it changed the public. so it would play out completely different. as josh said, that original third rate burglary would be white hot. it whould be white hot news 24/7 an election bearing down you would have incredible heat. i'm not sure the time for the story to unfold in the way it did would be the same. i think that prosecutors have learned more, judges have learned more, congress has learned more, the white house has learned. >> congress learned more? >> well, we all are hopefully cynical. >> i feel this thing would be completely different and who knows but maybe it's over by the election. who knows but maybe it's a 6-month story than a two-year story. who knows but maybe you never get the smoking gun tape. >> who knows. this is history. >> the what if. >> one of the colleges asked students in a journalism class to write a one-page paper on how watergate would be covered now. the professor sent -- >> why do you say what school it was which is interesting. >> yale. steve brill, the professor.
i think in the same way that watergate changed journalism it changed government officials, it changed the public. so it would play out completely different. as josh said, that original third rate burglary would be white hot. it whould be white hot news 24/7 an election bearing down you would have incredible heat. i'm not sure the time for the story to unfold in the way it did would be the same. i think that prosecutors have learned more, judges have learned more, congress has learned more, the...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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39
May 10, 2012
05/12
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SFGTV
tv
eye 39
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we're you are pulling people from the district and the city government. other stakeholder's parents and the cbo's. i have to commend your staff, carla and amanda from the cdo side. the results of this summit that we saw less than a month ago. i was pretty excited about it. not only because of the summit itself but as mollison was describing, some of the activities that took place beforehand. we could improve on it but the fact that we got this done for teachers to visit each other's classroom and a kindergarten classes to break down the barrier. what they said would be important. the other thing i want to say, it was so exciting in the report and when the panel spoke. and the commitment from different departments in the city, including our own district to continue this dialogue. i said from the beginning that people kept asking, what do you want out of this summit? as if something will magically happen, concrete way that [unintelligible] i kept reminding people this is only the beginning. if we could get this to a good start, we could continue to dialogue
we're you are pulling people from the district and the city government. other stakeholder's parents and the cbo's. i have to commend your staff, carla and amanda from the cdo side. the results of this summit that we saw less than a month ago. i was pretty excited about it. not only because of the summit itself but as mollison was describing, some of the activities that took place beforehand. we could improve on it but the fact that we got this done for teachers to visit each other's classroom...
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304
Nov 7, 2012
11/12
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 304
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he governed large in the first two years when he passed the largest sfim lus which is all spl ideas. he tried to enact them. in toward to low this is not a mandate in the numbers or in the way he campaigns. he did not campaign on any ideas. anything charge, anything important. he didn't address entitlements or anything like that. i think he has -- he would go back to who he is. people have said he should have auk successful cover term. he is not a moderate he will try to push his agenda through. >> you heard krauthammer reference clinton's stint to the center. we will hear analysis on that when former presidential council brian davis. >> the time is 140 minutes after the pop of the hour. he says. obama businesses another total. fair and dalesed de date why people voted the way they did. some answers may surprise you. [ male announcer ] when was the last time something made your jaw drop? campbell's has 24 new soups that will make it drop over, and over again. ♪ from jammin' jerk chicken, to creamy gouda bisque. see what's new from campbell's. it's amazing what soup can do. >> in th
he governed large in the first two years when he passed the largest sfim lus which is all spl ideas. he tried to enact them. in toward to low this is not a mandate in the numbers or in the way he campaigns. he did not campaign on any ideas. anything charge, anything important. he didn't address entitlements or anything like that. i think he has -- he would go back to who he is. people have said he should have auk successful cover term. he is not a moderate he will try to push his agenda...
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93
Jan 23, 2012
01/12
by
CNN
tv
eye 93
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the budget of the government is only about $5 billion. he said anti-marks operations alone won't bring down the horrific murder rate. to do that he had to convince the public that murders would be solved. step one is create a team. in the ministry of justice, i visited the csi unit. here teams take turns living in shifts like firefighters in a firehouse. >> in this room, a crime is monitored 24 hours a day. when a crime is committed, the radios start going off and they launch the investigators to the scene of the crime. in the last week, how many times have you gone out to investigate crime scenes or murders? >> six times. >> wow. >> the minster said the new efforts are paying off. >> in the past couple of years, the murder rate has begun to decline. >> for takes more than training investigators. radical surgery had to be performed to fight one of the region's biggest and oldest problems. corruption. this is the large suburb, population 1 million. it used to be one of the more violent areas in guatemala city, but two crime-fighting pilot
the budget of the government is only about $5 billion. he said anti-marks operations alone won't bring down the horrific murder rate. to do that he had to convince the public that murders would be solved. step one is create a team. in the ministry of justice, i visited the csi unit. here teams take turns living in shifts like firefighters in a firehouse. >> in this room, a crime is monitored 24 hours a day. when a crime is committed, the radios start going off and they launch the...
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155
May 21, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 155
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but that has to change when you go into government. i think -- there was a bigger reason, but one of the reasons why collectively the blair government was too close to some people in the press was because of our experience in opposition. and we had not stopped and thought, hang on, we can't continue to operate that way in government. >> i will pick that point up a little bit later, mr. straw. the points you make in the paragraphs, points which we've heard from other witnesses, in particular the need to sensationalize really, the truth may be prosaic and boring. but if you add the spice of a clash or conflict it becomes more interesting. this is paragraph 20. >> yes. >> and the problems of print media decline. mr. campbell spoke to those matters. are there any points you'd wish to elaborate? >> two sets of points. there wasn't ever a golden age of journalism. and indeed before radio got going, newspapers were even more powerful than they are today. and part of the focus of the labor party it's still there. certainly it's about the role
but that has to change when you go into government. i think -- there was a bigger reason, but one of the reasons why collectively the blair government was too close to some people in the press was because of our experience in opposition. and we had not stopped and thought, hang on, we can't continue to operate that way in government. >> i will pick that point up a little bit later, mr. straw. the points you make in the paragraphs, points which we've heard from other witnesses, in...
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158
Dec 24, 2012
12/12
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FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 158
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the world is governed from that. it is not the big corporations or banks that run the economy, it is the young couple who decide to work. >> when they are educated with wealth they . >> are helpful. this fantastic investment in vaccinations that helps so do you not have a kid who is physically handicapped for life, that drags the family down. the way that government sources are used is crucial. there are some things like advancement and research and primary school we need the government money but it has to be controlled. >> thank you, sir. next, you want to live to be 150? my next guest says the first person to do so my have already been born. it might be you. do you want to live to be 150? i don't. how advances in medicine may change everything. .so as you cas customer satisfaction is at 97%. mmmm tasty. and cut! very good. people are always asking me how we make these geico adverts. so we're taking you behind the scenes. this coffee cup, for example, is computer animated. it's not real. geico's customer satisfactio
the world is governed from that. it is not the big corporations or banks that run the economy, it is the young couple who decide to work. >> when they are educated with wealth they . >> are helpful. this fantastic investment in vaccinations that helps so do you not have a kid who is physically handicapped for life, that drags the family down. the way that government sources are used is crucial. there are some things like advancement and research and primary school we need the...
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149
Mar 31, 2012
03/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 149
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with a base of 300 or 500,000 government employees who would vote no. that might change the dynamics a little bit but again, when you talk about the culture, and i do spend a good deal of time in this book, talking about how we have gone off on this, created this privileged class. i am not denigrating public employees. i'm not saying that you know they should be demonized. what i am saying is let's have a reality check out how different the world is or the people who are paying the bills and what an extraordinarily sweet deal they have. this is one of the frustrating things to watch all these people talking about the new egypt and our rights are being destroyed and adolf hitler because they are taking 12% of your health care premium. the average american pays about 25% of their health care premium. they contribute to their own pension and they are paying nothing? so to have a culture in which you have people who felt so entitled to a lavish pension, lavish health care and not contribute virtually anything at all, and we have seen this revolution in wisc
with a base of 300 or 500,000 government employees who would vote no. that might change the dynamics a little bit but again, when you talk about the culture, and i do spend a good deal of time in this book, talking about how we have gone off on this, created this privileged class. i am not denigrating public employees. i'm not saying that you know they should be demonized. what i am saying is let's have a reality check out how different the world is or the people who are paying the bills and...
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171
Jun 3, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN
tv
eye 171
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it would have been total crisis mode for the whole of the government. if i would have said we're going to have a show of hands now, who voted which way and how would have been out in 30 seconds. the business of politics, part of the problem here, which is why this is the right moment to assess what can be done is the business of politics has become acutely more difficult, not for the fault of either politicians or media, but because the system in which you operate is fundamentally different. this is a problem that has arisen here in a particular way and that's why we have this inquiry. but you can talk to any leader in the democratic world today and they would say this is a major question, how they have the right interaction with the media in a world and that is light years away from what we grew up with. >> your informal contacts with mrs. brooks, did many of those have to do with her personal support for you in the context of what she describes as hostility between you and mr. brown? >> to be fair to her, she was pretty cautious about what she said ab
it would have been total crisis mode for the whole of the government. if i would have said we're going to have a show of hands now, who voted which way and how would have been out in 30 seconds. the business of politics, part of the problem here, which is why this is the right moment to assess what can be done is the business of politics has become acutely more difficult, not for the fault of either politicians or media, but because the system in which you operate is fundamentally different....
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220
Dec 1, 2012
12/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 220
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the stakes are about what are the norms that govern democratic governance. i think the history of democratic governance is that rules are important but norms are even more important. when those norms degrade you begin to get degradation of the democratic process. i think we are viewing a kind of degradation of the norms, right? this kind of disintegration in the way the body operates, and i think that there's a way to address that. >> majority compulsion will change the senate forever. >> and by that you mean if they do the thing in which 51 senators are -- change the rules, you're saying that precedent will change it forever? >> first of all, technically it only takes a majority to change the rules. >> that's important. can you resay that? can you say that again? >> a vote on an amendment to change the rules is a simple majority. the issue is ending debate on that question and there you do get into the filibuster. >> right. >> and unlimited debate. the very nature of the senate as it's operated for two centuries is premised on the fact that debate is unlimi
the stakes are about what are the norms that govern democratic governance. i think the history of democratic governance is that rules are important but norms are even more important. when those norms degrade you begin to get degradation of the democratic process. i think we are viewing a kind of degradation of the norms, right? this kind of disintegration in the way the body operates, and i think that there's a way to address that. >> majority compulsion will change the senate forever....
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140
May 22, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 140
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too, and there was some problem with the approach we adopted and the fact that we survived in that government and whilst others didn't. >> arguably, there is polar positions like the ones that mr. airborn adopts and we will see in his piece that it is all of the political classes, and then in the position of mr. campbell, it is more of the fault of fourth estate. culture of negativity, everything else, do you have a different pope ssition, a mid position. >> yes, i have indicated that the truth lies in between, and there are high responsibilities on both journalists in the media and journalists in the newspapers, and i am not trying to be polly anna-ish, and that is the wrong metaphor, but the balanced approach lies in the middle. we fed each other. mr. airborn is completely all of the wall in what he writes, but mr. campbell is not completely correct either. >> one can debate the diagnosis, but what if anything can be done about it in the free democracy? >> well, i think that the process of this inquiry is quite doing something about it, just as the process of the "lawrence inquiry" and the
too, and there was some problem with the approach we adopted and the fact that we survived in that government and whilst others didn't. >> arguably, there is polar positions like the ones that mr. airborn adopts and we will see in his piece that it is all of the political classes, and then in the position of mr. campbell, it is more of the fault of fourth estate. culture of negativity, everything else, do you have a different pope ssition, a mid position. >> yes, i have indicated...
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goal is to shrink the size of government and so they just simply can't accept that reality you say ideology mitt romney at one point when he was governor massachusetts in fact he signed a cap and trade laws saying you know c o two is a real problem we're going to do something about this and signed into the northeast compact you know proudly proclaim global warming was real and then when he wanted to run for president he had to walk that back it seems to me like that's not ideology that's opportunism i'm wondering what percentage of the people who are out there claiming that there is no such thing as global warming might be doing so because their campaign contributions from fossil fuel industry or the the risk of the fossil fuel industry funding somebody to run against or destroy their careers is so great do you have any. yeah i think that's exactly right in mitt romney's case opportunism is. in fact the fossil fuel so i think what we have is a mix of fossil fuel money and sort of ideologues that as fuel the climate denial in this election cycle the fossil fuel interests spent something like
goal is to shrink the size of government and so they just simply can't accept that reality you say ideology mitt romney at one point when he was governor massachusetts in fact he signed a cap and trade laws saying you know c o two is a real problem we're going to do something about this and signed into the northeast compact you know proudly proclaim global warming was real and then when he wanted to run for president he had to walk that back it seems to me like that's not ideology that's...
603
603
Dec 19, 2012
12/12
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 603
favorite 0
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you know how much money your government spends every day? how about how much money your government spends every hour? these numbers are staggering. we'll have them for you, mar this and i join you in ten minutes on "america's news room." we'll see you then waking the ba. [ coughs ] [ baby crying ] ♪ [ male announcer ] robitussin® liquid formula soothes your throat on contact and the active ingredient relieves your cough. robitussin®. don't suffer the coughequences™. tomato, obviously. haha. there's more than that though, there's a kick to it. wahlalalalallala! smooth, but crisp. it's kind of like drinking a food that's a drink, or a drink that's a food, woooooh! [ male announcer ] taste it and describe the indescribable. could've had a v8. [ male announcer ] taste it and describe the indescribable. try running four.ning a restaurant is hard, fortunately we've got ink. it gives us 5x the rewards on our internet, phone charges and cable, plus at office supply stores. rewards we put right back into our business. this is the only thing we'
you know how much money your government spends every day? how about how much money your government spends every hour? these numbers are staggering. we'll have them for you, mar this and i join you in ten minutes on "america's news room." we'll see you then waking the ba. [ coughs ] [ baby crying ] ♪ [ male announcer ] robitussin® liquid formula soothes your throat on contact and the active ingredient relieves your cough. robitussin®. don't suffer the coughequences™. tomato,...
270
270
May 18, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 270
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facebook wants all this help from the government to promote itself. yet the owners, the ceos of the company are doing everything they possibly can to avoid paying taxes. they are extracting billions of dollars from the american public but now are renouncing their citizenships to avoid paying taxes. >> gautham nagesh. >> well, i assume the caller's referring to facebook co-founder eduardo saverin who is a brazilian naturalized citizen who decided to renounce his citizenship. he spoke in the "new york times" yesterday. he said that that decision was actually made last january. regardless, the impression has been by many people that he is doing this to avoid paying taxes after facebook goes public. he will actually have to pay capital gains taxes on his entire holdings. i've seen "the economist," which owns cq, estimated that to be as much as a half billion dollars at the current valuations. that is still of course a bet that the shares are going to be worth more in the future. mr. saverin says he simply has decided to move on, he's an international citi
facebook wants all this help from the government to promote itself. yet the owners, the ceos of the company are doing everything they possibly can to avoid paying taxes. they are extracting billions of dollars from the american public but now are renouncing their citizenships to avoid paying taxes. >> gautham nagesh. >> well, i assume the caller's referring to facebook co-founder eduardo saverin who is a brazilian naturalized citizen who decided to renounce his citizenship. he spoke...
158
158
Dec 29, 2012
12/12
by
CNNW
tv
eye 158
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govern, everyone. i'm christine romans, welcome to our help desk special. the best way to make money is make sure your money is working for you. be honest. maybe you'd rather go to the dentist than get an annual checkup of your money. here goes. sit down. it won't hurt. you won't have the to give up your morning latte or anything like that. three drivers for your health, job, investment and health. a great year for the s&p 500. did you miss it? the s&p is up around 13% so far this year. the dow is above 13,000 again. calm it the ben bernanke rally. his fed pumping billions of dollars into the company, and stocks are loving it. but individual investors have missed it. stock, mutual fund outflows upwards of a trillion dollars so far this year. don't feel bad. hedge funds running scared, too. what's been scaring everybody? the fiscal cliff, anemic u.s. growth, europe's financial crisis, china's slowdown. so proceed, but proceed with caution. co-founder and president of ulta capital management, jack otter, editor and author of "worth it, not worth it" and walte
govern, everyone. i'm christine romans, welcome to our help desk special. the best way to make money is make sure your money is working for you. be honest. maybe you'd rather go to the dentist than get an annual checkup of your money. here goes. sit down. it won't hurt. you won't have the to give up your morning latte or anything like that. three drivers for your health, job, investment and health. a great year for the s&p 500. did you miss it? the s&p is up around 13% so far this year....
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113
Mar 8, 2012
03/12
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 113
favorite 0
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government regulations change... oil peaks and plummets. and let's not even get started on the weather. the fact is: no two flights are ever the same. no matter how many times we've accomplished them in the past. the eighty-thousand employees at delta... must predict the unpredictable. anticipate the unexpected. and never let the rules... overrule common sense. this is how we tame the unwieldiness of air travel. pull it taut... and wrap it around the globe... until it's not just lines you see... it's the world. oh there's tons. french presses, espresso tampers, filters. it can get really complicated. not nearly as complicated as shipping it though. i mean shipping is a hassle. not with priority mail flat rate boxes from the postal service. if it fits it ships, anywhere in the country for a low flat rate. that is easy. best news i've heard all day! i'm soooo amped! i mean not amped. excited. well, sort of amped. really kind of in between. have you ever thought about decaf? do you think that would help? yeah. priority mail flat rate shipping
government regulations change... oil peaks and plummets. and let's not even get started on the weather. the fact is: no two flights are ever the same. no matter how many times we've accomplished them in the past. the eighty-thousand employees at delta... must predict the unpredictable. anticipate the unexpected. and never let the rules... overrule common sense. this is how we tame the unwieldiness of air travel. pull it taut... and wrap it around the globe... until it's not just lines you...
102
102
Jun 23, 2012
06/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 102
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it has been said that watergate ushered in an era of skepticism about the competence of government and about generally speaking particularly when combined with the vietnam war the uses of executive power in particular. that skepticism arose in the context of a country where we needed and where we have developed an energetic executive. >> that was the executive privilege. perhaps what watergate accomplished was not really to make the public merely skeptical of the president is he, but rather to affirmatively weaken the presidency. to diminish it. to demystify it. >> they embraced a kind of pop lichl that is designed to show empathy with voters and assure voters that the candidate can be entrusted with power. an assurance that was made all the more necessary by watergate. a contradiction emerges, or as the modern presidency has become more popu list, the ability to persuade the american people has been emboldened. presidents now regularly go public, and in doing so, they have assumed an ever greater role in swallowing up legislative power and in dictating the content of national legislat
it has been said that watergate ushered in an era of skepticism about the competence of government and about generally speaking particularly when combined with the vietnam war the uses of executive power in particular. that skepticism arose in the context of a country where we needed and where we have developed an energetic executive. >> that was the executive privilege. perhaps what watergate accomplished was not really to make the public merely skeptical of the president is he, but...